Holiday Wishlist Meme

Dec 01, 2013 03:57

Step One:
Make an post. It can be public or friends only, whatever you’re most comfortable with. The post should contain your list of ten holiday wishes, and these wishes can be anything - from simple (fan fiction written about your favorite pairing), to medium (a DVD you want), to really extravagant (a brand new laptop or car).

Just make sure these are wishes for things you really truly want.

Step Two:
Skim through your friends list and see who has posted their own wish lists. Then - and this is the most important part - if you find a wish you can grant, and it’s in your heart to do so, make sure that person’s wish comes true.

Sometimes a person’s trash is another person’s treasure. If you have a leather jacket you don’t want or a gift certificate you’re never going to use, give it to someone who wants it.

Step Three:
Post this wish list any time after November 1st. Then repost it two weeks before Christmas.
You needn't spend money on these wishes unless you want to. The point isn't to put people out, it's to provide everyone a chance to be someone else's holiday fairy - to spread the joy.
Gifts can be made anonymously or not, it's your call.
There are no rules with this project, no guarantees, and no strings attached. Just...wish, and it might come true. Give, and you might receive. And you'll have the joy of knowing you made someone's holiday special.

1) A clean bathroom
2) A clean bathroom in the future
3) Mopped kitchen floor (I promise, the entire list isn't in this vein)
4) L to build a good network of people, as his family is small and only going to get smaller
5) A good, traditional, sung version of the Holly & the Ivy (No jazz, no medly)
6) 85 Ways to Tie a Tie (book) by Fink & Mao
7) Tabi socks, black or other solid color. I wear a women's size 10.5-11 shoe (also called flip-flop socks or ninja socks)
8) Lunch during the week with people during next year. Unfortunately, I don't have a car at work so you'd have to come to campus area or pick me up. I'm find with brown bagging it.
9) Mouse Guard: The Black Axe by David Peterson. (Note, this is a hard back or at least thick book, not a tiny one-issue paperback).
10) Freudian Slips: Cartoons on Psychology or All Ends Up by Sidney Harris
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